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Howard Lund dies
From the St Paul Pioneer Press
Lund, whose boat became a keeper, dies at 91 His durable aluminum craft found on almost every in state lake BY THERESA MONSOUR Pioneer Press The man whose name is floating on nearly every lake in Minnesota has died. G. Howard Lund, founder of Lund Boat Co., died Wednesday at his Detroit Lakes home. He was 91. Lund's impact on the Land of Lakes can be seen on the water. Of 750,000 registered boats in Minnesota, 110,000 are Lunds. Services are Monday in New York Mills, the birthplace of the famous aluminum craft and the community that continues to serve as company headquarters. Two red boats will be parked on the lawn of the funeral home to honor his memory. Red and white Lund Boat flags will decorate the streets of the town, located about 200 miles northwest of the Twin Cities. In the town of 1,100, the boat company employs 575 people. Nearly everyone works at Lund or has relatives who do. Although Lund himself had been retired from the company since 1981 - and it is now a division of Genmar Holdings, a company led by Minneapolis financier Irwin Jacobs - he remained in the hearts and minds of New York Mills. He fished and hunted with folks from town after his retirement. A park with a baseball diamond and playground is named after him. G. Howard Lund - the "G" stood for Gordon, but no one in town ever called him that - was born in Gary, Minn. His father, a railroad depot agent in Twin Valley, Minn., died when Lund was young. The family moved to New York Mills where his mother and grandmother ran the Lund and Dennison Variety Store. He graduated from New York Mills High School in 1930, attended the University of Minnesota, then went to Dunwoody Institute in Minneapolis, where he learned mechanical drafting and fabrication. He worked for a sheet-metal fabricating and roofing company in Albert Lea, and then for the U.S. Navy at Mare Island Navy Yard in Vallejo, Calif., repairing ships and submarines that came into the harbor. In 1946, he returned to New York Mills, where he operated a sawmill and worked as a roofer. He also worked with galvanized metal doing ductwork for a heating business, said Keith Boyne, vice president of marketing for Lund Boat Co. Boyne, 52, grew up knowing the man and started working for Lund in 1969. Boyne's father, Thomas Boyne, hunted and fished with Lund. When Lund started making boats - the very first were wooden duck boats - Thomas Boyne bought one, said the younger Boyne. Lund started making crafts with galvanized sheet metal and graduated to aluminum. According to the history of the company, Lund built his first aluminum duck boat in 1947 and the boat company officially began in 1949. Boyne's father worked for Lund for a period in the 1950s. He spent weekends helping Lund carry boats to the basement of a local car dealership and paint the crafts. They were basic fishing boats at the time of about 15 feet. The Lund children were involved in the business as youngsters. Lindy Kilde of Moorhead, the youngest daughter, remembered the family taking the boats on a lake to test durability. They'd dump buckets of water into them. "We never could get them to sink," she said. The tests were important to her father, she said. "He just wanted to make the best boat possible," she said, "and he did." Boyne echoed those sentiments: "Howard really keyed in on quality. He made the product strong enough and durable and safe." That durability is what makes aluminum boats so popular in Minnesota, said Kim Elverum, boat and water safety coordinator for the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources. Wooden boats were fraught with maintenance problems, such as rotting. "When the aluminum boat came along and got popular in the late 1950s and early 1960s, it was a perfect boat in Minnesota." He said the other two popular aluminum boats in Minnesota, also locally made, are Alumacraft and Crestliner. "But in Minnesota, if you see a red aluminum boat, it's a Lund," he said, recalling that for many years, that was the color for a Lund. The company has 250 dealers in the United States, 120 in Canada and two in Europe. In addition to the plants in New York Mills, there is a site in Steinbach, Manitoba, that employs 150 workers, said Boyne. Boyne remembers the man as much as his boats. "He was always such a kind, kind man," said Boyne. "Soft-spoken, yet people knew when he meant business. He had the time to talk with you on the street. On the sidewalk. Ask how the family was." The visitation will be from 4 to 8 p.m. Sunday at Karvonen & Son Funeral Home in New York Mills. The funeral will be 11 a.m. Monday at St. Peter's Evangelical Lutheran Church in New York Mills. Burial will be in Greenwood Cemetery in New York Mills. Lund's first wife, Elfie, preceded him in death. He is survived by his wife, Stella Lund of Detroit Lakes; three daughters, Judy Albaugh of New York Mills, Karen Dahl of Detroit Lakes and Lindy Kilde of Moorhead; one son, Gordy Lund of Fergus Falls; 14 grandchildren, 23 great-grandchildren and three great-great-grandchildren. |
Howard Lund dies
We have a real big Lund dealer, "Gone Fishin' Marine", in Dixon, CA.
Dixon is a small town on Interstate 80 between Sacramento and San Francisco. -- Bill Kiene Kiene's Fly Shop Sacramento, CA www.kiene.com "del cecchi" wrote in message ... From the St Paul Pioneer Press Lund, whose boat became a keeper, dies at 91 His durable aluminum craft found on almost every in state lake BY THERESA MONSOUR Pioneer Press The man whose name is floating on nearly every lake in Minnesota has died. G. Howard Lund, founder of Lund Boat Co., died Wednesday at his Detroit Lakes home. He was 91. Lund's impact on the Land of Lakes can be seen on the water. Of 750,000 registered boats in Minnesota, 110,000 are Lunds. Services are Monday in New York Mills, the birthplace of the famous aluminum craft and the community that continues to serve as company headquarters. Two red boats will be parked on the lawn of the funeral home to honor his memory. Red and white Lund Boat flags will decorate the streets of the town, located about 200 miles northwest of the Twin Cities. In the town of 1,100, the boat company employs 575 people. Nearly everyone works at Lund or has relatives who do. Although Lund himself had been retired from the company since 1981 - and it is now a division of Genmar Holdings, a company led by Minneapolis financier Irwin Jacobs - he remained in the hearts and minds of New York Mills. He fished and hunted with folks from town after his retirement. A park with a baseball diamond and playground is named after him. G. Howard Lund - the "G" stood for Gordon, but no one in town ever called him that - was born in Gary, Minn. His father, a railroad depot agent in Twin Valley, Minn., died when Lund was young. The family moved to New York Mills where his mother and grandmother ran the Lund and Dennison Variety Store. He graduated from New York Mills High School in 1930, attended the University of Minnesota, then went to Dunwoody Institute in Minneapolis, where he learned mechanical drafting and fabrication. He worked for a sheet-metal fabricating and roofing company in Albert Lea, and then for the U.S. Navy at Mare Island Navy Yard in Vallejo, Calif., repairing ships and submarines that came into the harbor. In 1946, he returned to New York Mills, where he operated a sawmill and worked as a roofer. He also worked with galvanized metal doing ductwork for a heating business, said Keith Boyne, vice president of marketing for Lund Boat Co. Boyne, 52, grew up knowing the man and started working for Lund in 1969. Boyne's father, Thomas Boyne, hunted and fished with Lund. When Lund started making boats - the very first were wooden duck boats - Thomas Boyne bought one, said the younger Boyne. Lund started making crafts with galvanized sheet metal and graduated to aluminum. According to the history of the company, Lund built his first aluminum duck boat in 1947 and the boat company officially began in 1949. Boyne's father worked for Lund for a period in the 1950s. He spent weekends helping Lund carry boats to the basement of a local car dealership and paint the crafts. They were basic fishing boats at the time of about 15 feet. The Lund children were involved in the business as youngsters. Lindy Kilde of Moorhead, the youngest daughter, remembered the family taking the boats on a lake to test durability. They'd dump buckets of water into them. "We never could get them to sink," she said. The tests were important to her father, she said. "He just wanted to make the best boat possible," she said, "and he did." Boyne echoed those sentiments: "Howard really keyed in on quality. He made the product strong enough and durable and safe." That durability is what makes aluminum boats so popular in Minnesota, said Kim Elverum, boat and water safety coordinator for the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources. Wooden boats were fraught with maintenance problems, such as rotting. "When the aluminum boat came along and got popular in the late 1950s and early 1960s, it was a perfect boat in Minnesota." He said the other two popular aluminum boats in Minnesota, also locally made, are Alumacraft and Crestliner. "But in Minnesota, if you see a red aluminum boat, it's a Lund," he said, recalling that for many years, that was the color for a Lund. The company has 250 dealers in the United States, 120 in Canada and two in Europe. In addition to the plants in New York Mills, there is a site in Steinbach, Manitoba, that employs 150 workers, said Boyne. Boyne remembers the man as much as his boats. "He was always such a kind, kind man," said Boyne. "Soft-spoken, yet people knew when he meant business. He had the time to talk with you on the street. On the sidewalk. Ask how the family was." The visitation will be from 4 to 8 p.m. Sunday at Karvonen & Son Funeral Home in New York Mills. The funeral will be 11 a.m. Monday at St. Peter's Evangelical Lutheran Church in New York Mills. Burial will be in Greenwood Cemetery in New York Mills. Lund's first wife, Elfie, preceded him in death. He is survived by his wife, Stella Lund of Detroit Lakes; three daughters, Judy Albaugh of New York Mills, Karen Dahl of Detroit Lakes and Lindy Kilde of Moorhead; one son, Gordy Lund of Fergus Falls; 14 grandchildren, 23 great-grandchildren and three great-great-grandchildren. |
Howard Lund dies
WaIIy wrote: On Tue, 28 Oct 2003 21:19:59 -0500, Harry Krause wrote: I remember the first time I fished off a Lund. It was on a lake in Central Florida, and it completely changed my mind about aluminum boats. Too bad the business couldn't have been passed down to his children, rather than a soul-less conglomerate. Too bad you even step on an obituary to submit your political agenda. You are soulless. krause is compulsive obsessive. Used to be that people like him would be helped with their mental deficency, but nowadays some people believe he's a champion of their cause. You see the same thing going on with rush limbaugh. shakin head -- Charlie ----== Posted via Newsfeed.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeed.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 100,000 Newsgroups ---= 19 East/West-Coast Specialized Servers - Total Privacy via Encryption =--- |
Howard Lund dies
"del cecchi" wrote in message
... Lund's impact on the Land of Lakes can be seen on the water. Of 750,000 registered boats in Minnesota, 110,000 are Lunds. Amazing numbers! I like mine. What's odd is that at the boat launch, when I'm in the midst of larger, fancier boats, people tell me what a pretty boat my Lund is, and it's just a 14' thing with 3 bench seats. A seaworthy rowboat. |
Howard Lund dies
Sorry the old guy died.
Worse ways to go, though. Live to be 90-some years old and see 3/4 million folks enjoying a product with your name on it? We should all do as well. If there's a heaven and if there are lakes to fish in there.......(some would likely suppose that if there aren't lakes to fish in it couldn't possibly be heaven)....they will soon likely have some aluminum boats for the saints to paddle 'round in. :-) |
Howard Lund dies
Yassir.
Hat's off to a man who did much for boating. salute -W "Gould 0738" wrote in message If there's a heaven and if there are lakes to fish in there.......(some would likely suppose that if there aren't lakes to fish in it couldn't possibly be heaven)....they will soon likely have some aluminum boats for the saints to paddle 'round in. :-) |
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